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Old 03-23-2009, 11:07 AM   #81
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WAI increases economy in O2 sensor/feedback fuel injected cars by reducing throttling losses at part load. EGR works the same way.

CAI hurts FE at part throttle, but it does improve power at full throttle.
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Old 03-23-2009, 11:47 AM   #82
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I have completed my experiment and here are the results HAI wins by .........10.1mpg See the link below.

http://www.gassavers.org/showthread.php?t=10415
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Old 03-23-2009, 03:10 PM   #83
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Because trying something that you know won't work (and has been proven not to work by others) is a waste of time. If you would like to prove me wrong, be my guest.


Did you get a metal for that accomplishment? When you get to 100% over the EPA let me know. Until then, here's a cookie for you.

Actually I do get metals and papers for doing this because I spend less money on fuel that means I get $$ in my pocket
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Old 03-23-2009, 03:34 PM   #84
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$$ with which you can buy a box of cookies?
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Old 03-23-2009, 03:50 PM   #85
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But the cookies make you gain weight, which hurts your mpg...
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Main Entry: co de pen dence - see codependency
co de pen den cy
Pronunciation: \kō-di-ˈpen-dən(t)-sē\
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: a psychological condition or a relationship in which a person is controlled or manipulated by another who is affected with a pathological condition (as an addiction to alcohol or heroin) ; broadly : dependence on the needs of or control by another
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Old 03-23-2009, 03:54 PM   #86
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Cookies give you a sugar rush, which enables you to put more energy into hypermiling strategies that require lots of attention, like EOC.
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Old 03-24-2009, 03:43 AM   #87
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I have completed my experiment and here are the results HAI wins by .........10.1mpg See the link below.

http://www.gassavers.org/showthread.php?t=10415
^^^ Total BS.

You test was not accurate. You drove less than 100 miles per test and the mileage wasn't even the same between the 2 tests. And it's way to easy to pump an extra half gallon when you only used 1.5 gallons.

Nice try but you FAIL.
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Old 03-24-2009, 03:54 AM   #88
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When you're talking a distance like that, 4/10 of a mile is statistically insignifigant. He drove 130.8 miles. The same trip back to back. At our standard hypermiling speed of 55 MPH he would have spent a minimum of 2.38 hours on the road. Are you offering to set up your vehicle, drive in a 300 mile circle, one with, and one without HAI back to back? That's going to be one heck of a day driving 600 miles, at 55 MPH that's just shy of 11 hours on the road.

-Jay
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Old 03-24-2009, 04:21 AM   #89
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The time a WAI will help fuel economy is in colder weather while the engine is warming up. But it's not because the engine is getting warm air instead of cold air, it's because the engine is getting up to operation temp quicker. Once the car is up to operating temp the WAI is no longer helping. The fuel savings is not from a WAI but from a engine that gets up to operating temp sooner. This is why test results show little improvement and vary greatly with different cars. A car that warms up quickly on it's own will show little improvement with a WAI but a car that takes a long time to warm up normally will show greater improvement with a WAI.

This is the reason why older carbureted cars of the 70's and 80's had factory installed, vacuum controlled warm air systems. When the engine was cold, a flap in the air cleaner lid closed to block the cold air inlet and pull air in off the outside of the exhaust manifolds. As the engine warmed the valve would open to allow in colder air and block of the hot air. Another reason for this is that carbureted engines don't atomize the fuel that well. The hotter air helped with fuel atomization however, this is not a problem in modern cars with fuel injection.

The flap operated whether the car was cold or warm. When it malfunctioned you could get killed trying to cross a street, the hesitation is something younger drivers have never experienced. Fuel mileage dropped 50%, plugs black.

It didn't work cold, because there was no heat to warm anything up The choke was used for that. Some cars had passageways that allowed hot exhaust gases to pass through the intake manifold (1937 Ford). The Chrysler slant sixes had a exhaust manifold junction right under the carburetor to warn things up.

Warm or cold----facts backed by real evidence.

Again, best fuel economy comes from a fully warmed up engine (warm coolant and warm oil), not warm intake air. You want a good idea for better economy? Install an intake system that pulls in warm air during startup when the engine is below operating temp but switches to cold air when the engine is fully warm. Another good idea: install an engine block heater and an oil pan heater to keep the coolant and oil temp warm when the engine is not running.
Lets see, by your statement you have concluded that there is no difference between a warm engine at 20 below and a warm engine at 100 degrees as far as fuel economy. I would like to see you provide a shred of proof of that statement, or are the temperature extremes too great.

The imperfections of modern fuel injection are clearly demonstrated by the efforts of manufacturers to achieve Homogenous Charge Compression Ignition in gasoline engines. Homogenous Charge means the fuel and air mixture is truly evenly distrubuted in the combustion chamber. That same mixture is ignited by compression alone without any spark whatsoever. The result is a 25% improvement in economy as well as the elimination of the catalytic converter with virtually zero regulated emissions.

Why would manufactirers spend tons of money to improve a system if your statement about it being perfect was true? The fact is the present systems look much better when compared to the old carburetor types, however there is still a massive potential for improvement.

Google HCCI if you really want to learn that there is much room for improvement over the present system that you describe as perfect. By perfect you imply that there is no room for improvement in fuel distribution because modern engines are fuel injected. HCCI proves without any doubt that modern systems are far from perfect.

The attached photo is my mileage from my trip yesterday. 65 MPG for 355.5 miles. Almost all of it was highway. The EPA highway rating for my car is 50 MPG. My modifications are a 40% grille block and 44 PSI air in the tires. Temperatures ranged from just above freezing to 65 degrees. Driving was from eastern Virginia to Blacksburg Virginia with elevation changes of 2000 feet. The grille block also retains heat in the engine compartment that increases the air temp to the intake system on the engine.

How much of the improvement was driving style, grille block, or tire pressure, or warm air would be difficult to distinguish, but the net overall improvement is 30%. Also consider that that is on 10% ethanol fuel which has a lower energy content than non ethanol fuel.

Also notice the fule guage is reading half a tank. That is a 10.5 gallon tank.

regards
gary
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Old 03-24-2009, 04:25 AM   #90
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Originally Posted by Jay2TheRescue View Post
When you're talking a distance like that, 4/10 of a mile is statistically insignifigant. He drove 130.8 miles. The same trip back to back. At our standard hypermiling speed of 55 MPH he would have spent a minimum of 2.38 hours on the road. Are you offering to set up your vehicle, drive in a 300 mile circle, one with, and one without HAI back to back? That's going to be one heck of a day driving 600 miles, at 55 MPH that's just shy of 11 hours on the road.

-Jay
Do you really believe that a WAI increases fuel economy by 10.1 mpg? Get real. If that was true, every car made today would have on from the factory. But they don't.

A SCIENTIFIC test needs to be done. Strick a car on a dyno, stabalize the coolant and oil temps, set a steady speed and maintain the same external air temps and use a scan guage to measure instand MPG and then switch from a external air inlet to an engine compartemt inlet and measure the difference.
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